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10 October 2017

Stefano Magaddino - mafioso

Longest-ruling Mafia boss in US history

Stefano Magaddino ran the Buffalo crime
family for more than half a century

Stefano Magaddino, the Sicilian mafioso who went on to enjoy
the longest period of power enjoyed by any crime boss in the history of the
American Mafia, was born on this day in 1891 in Castellammare del Golfo.

Known as ‘The Undertaker’ or ‘Don Stefano’, Magaddino controlled
a crime empire radiating outwards from Buffalo, on the shores of Lake Erie in
New York State. Geographically, it was a
vast area, stretching from the eastern fringe of New York State
to its western outposts in Ohio and extending north-east almost
as far as Montreal in Canada, its tentacles reaching across the Canadian border
from Buffalo even into Toronto.

One of the original members of The Commission, the committee
of seven crime bosses set up in 1931 to control Mafia activity across the whole
of the United States, Magaddino was head of the Buffalo Family for more than
half a century.

He died in 1974 at the age of 82, having survived all the
other Commission members, including the founder Charles ‘Lucky’ Luciano and
Chicago boss Al Capone, with the exception of his cousin from Castellammare,
Joseph Bonanno, who along with Luciano, headed one of the Five Families of the
New York underworld.

Magaddino never knew any life other than crime. The third of eight children born to Giovanni
and Giuseppa Ciaravino Magaddino, he was born in the midst of a feud between
his family and their rivals in Castellammare, the Buccellato family.

He had strong links with the Bonanno family in Sicily,
joining forces with Joe’s father, Salvatore, in 1899 after the latter’s
brothers, Stefano and Giuseppe, were killed on an order given by Felice
Buccellato.

New York boss Charles 'Lucky' Luciano
included Magaddino in The Commission

Bonanno and Magaddino took their revenge by ordering the
killing of two members from the Buccellato family. A peace was brokered in 1905,
before Salvatore Bonanno emigrated to the United States, to be followed, in 1909,
by Magaddino. They settled in a Castellammarese colony in the Williamsburg
section of Brooklyn.

The feud followed Magaddino to New York, however, leading to
the killing of his brother by Camillo Caiozzo, a member of the Buccellato clan,
in an ambush outside a Brooklyn department store. Caiozzo was himself soon
killed and in 1921 Magaddino was arrested in Avon, New Jersey on suspicion of
his murder.

At the time Magaddino was an influential member of the
increasingly powerful Castellammarese clan but when charges against him failed
to stick he took the opportunity to relocate to the Buffalo-Niagara Falls area.

There he laid down the beginnings of his empire. Behind the front of running a funeral home –
the Magaddino Memorial Chapel – in Niagara Falls, he set up a profitable
Prohibition era business bootlegging wines and spirits across the Niagara River
to supply the proliferation of so-called speakeasies in Buffalo.

After Prohibition was ended, Magaddino and his associates moved
into loan sharking, illegal gambling, narcotics, extortion, carjacking and labour
racketeering, gaining control too of lucrative legitimate businesses such as
taxi companies and the laundry and linen services essential to the area’s many hotels.

In the traditional manner of Sicilian Mafiosi, he gave the
impression of living a relatively modest lifestyle, doing his utmost to stay in
the background and draw as little attention as possible to his criminal
activities.

Joseph Bonanno, with whom
Magaddino shared his roots

He was admired by other gang bosses for the success he had
in controlling such a large area, while the remoteness of his territory enabled
him to remain untouched by the periodic squabbles between the New York families.
He was at times called on to an arbitrate in disputes.

He survived a number of attempts on his life. In 1936, his sister was killed by a bomb
intended for him but placed in the wrong house and in 1957 a grenade was thrown
through his kitchen window but failed to explode. The second of those episodes was linked to
the so-called Apalachin Conference, a meeting of Mafia bosses at a small town
in New York State.

The meeting had been arranged by Magaddino and when it was
raided by FBI agents, resulting in the arrest of several mobsters, there were suspicions
that he had tipped them off himself as a way of eliminating a few of his
rivals.

Later, the respect he enjoyed among his peers diminished
when he and his son, Peter, were hauled in by police on charges of illegal bookmaking
after a 1968 raid on his son’s home in Niagara Falls, which found around
$500,000 in a suitcase.

This aroused more disquiet among senior figures in the
Buffalo Family, suspecting him of skimming off profits, and rival groups began
to emerge. Within a year, Magaddino had
been ousted as boss, replaced first by Salvatore Pieri and ultimately by Samuel
Frangiamore, who had been joint leaders of a breakaway faction.

Magaddino managed to avoid significant spells in jail
throughout his rule. The illegal
bookmaking charges, based on a six-year long wire-tapping operation at the
funeral home in Niagara, were dropped after a judge ruled the evidence had been
obtained illegally.

He was named in Rome in 1967 as the head of a narcotics smuggling
ring that had trafficked about $150 million worth of heroin between Europe and
the United States between 1950 and 1960 but was never extradited. He died in 1974 following a heart attack.

Castellammare del Golfo enjoys a fine location on the
coast of northwest Sicily

Travel tip:

Castellammare del Golfo is a resort and fishing town
situated on a large bay in the northwest corner of Sicily, midway between
Trapani and Palermo. It has an
attractive setting, guarding over a broad sweep of water and with steep lanes
of houses climbing the hillside from the harbour towards the elevated Piazza
Petrolo. A popular backdrop for TV
dramas, including some episodes of the Inspector Montalbano series, it has the
remains of a castle probably built at the time of the ninth-century Arab
occupation of the town, and a good selection of bars and restaurants.

The Basilica of Maria SS Annunziata

Travel tip:

Trapani is a city of some 70,000 inhabitants on a coastal plain
around 100km (62 miles) west of Palermo, at the very western tip of the island.
Renowned for its seafood, it has a nearby airport but is not well known among
overseas tourists, yet offers an attractive base for visitors, with the
impressive Basilica-Sanctuary of Maria Santissima Annunziata and a 14th-century
cathedral among its attractions. The city is also famous for the Easter
Processione dei Misteri di Trapani, a day-long celebration of the Passion.

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All facts given on this website have been carefully researched and are published by the Italy On This Day Editor in good faith. All travel advice, hotel and restaurant recommendations are based on information that has been checked and was correct at the time of writing.